Hello everybody I am a 二世 (100% Jp blooded) and I grew up knowing Japanese first and it was my first language. I went to 補習校 (Japanese Saturday School) from First to Fifth grade (I think maybe Fourth, I forgot). Anyways I was doing so bad in my normal English school that I had to end up quitting.
I used to travel to Japan to visit my grandparents and the family on my mom's side every year from age 0-14 Basically before the summer of high school. Went to a Japanese Bilingual Elementary School. Then quickly switched to a Middle School full of non-Japanese. I lived in Japan from the 5th month of my birth to 14 months old which I why I am going to guess my first language was Japanese.
I never went to Japan during my High School days until 2 years in college. Even during High School I was able to speak and read early elementary Japanese and High School English. I still wasn't very good in English classes (I think it's mainly due to essays).
As I recall I remember doing well in Hoshuukou that writing 作文 wasn't a big issue for me.
Now I'm 26 years old. Last I went to Japan to visit family was 3 years ago and at the time I was so engraved in the English language due to friends all being Asian (but none of them being Japanese) and white I realized I forgot so many words even though I was still able to communicate with the people there but I sounded like a elementary kid.
Imagine being Japanese, grew up knowing Japanese, going to Japan at age 26 with proper Japanese pronunciation with no accents but lost a lot of vocabulary and only knows early Elementary Kanji. It's pretty embarrassing. Even more when I run into a foreign looking guy who speaks better Japanese than me.
Anyways, that's my story and to combat that I want get going and get my kanji down so no regrets later. My question is where and/or how should I start? Because I already know a handfull of Kanji since I see them on a daily basis at home (even though there's still a bunch of kanji at home I can't read) and learning from things like 日 and a bunch of basic numbers would seem like a waste of time since I clearly know them so well.
Thanks
I used to travel to Japan to visit my grandparents and the family on my mom's side every year from age 0-14 Basically before the summer of high school. Went to a Japanese Bilingual Elementary School. Then quickly switched to a Middle School full of non-Japanese. I lived in Japan from the 5th month of my birth to 14 months old which I why I am going to guess my first language was Japanese.
I never went to Japan during my High School days until 2 years in college. Even during High School I was able to speak and read early elementary Japanese and High School English. I still wasn't very good in English classes (I think it's mainly due to essays).
As I recall I remember doing well in Hoshuukou that writing 作文 wasn't a big issue for me.
Now I'm 26 years old. Last I went to Japan to visit family was 3 years ago and at the time I was so engraved in the English language due to friends all being Asian (but none of them being Japanese) and white I realized I forgot so many words even though I was still able to communicate with the people there but I sounded like a elementary kid.
Imagine being Japanese, grew up knowing Japanese, going to Japan at age 26 with proper Japanese pronunciation with no accents but lost a lot of vocabulary and only knows early Elementary Kanji. It's pretty embarrassing. Even more when I run into a foreign looking guy who speaks better Japanese than me.
Anyways, that's my story and to combat that I want get going and get my kanji down so no regrets later. My question is where and/or how should I start? Because I already know a handfull of Kanji since I see them on a daily basis at home (even though there's still a bunch of kanji at home I can't read) and learning from things like 日 and a bunch of basic numbers would seem like a waste of time since I clearly know them so well.
Thanks

. And, again, if you're studying Heisig through either this website or the Anki deck, the kanjis you know well will disappear immediately if you just keep choosing 'very easy' when they come up (just make sure you know how to write them properly!)